Saturday, February 25, 2012

Is spam meant to be read or really just meant to generate sales of anti-spam products?

Someone calculated that it was so inexpensive to send spam that even if only 1% of recipients bought what was being sold, it would still be cost-effective to send it. However, I receive so much that I estimate that the average person reads less than 1% of the spam they receive.



How do we know, really know, that these organ-enlargement, questionable medication, Nigerian funds, etc., promoters really exist? Could the companies that make money from anti-spam products be secretly behind most or all of the spam, and sending it themselves in order to increase their profits from anti-spam products?Is spam meant to be read or really just meant to generate sales of anti-spam products?
Spam may have started out to be ad-oriented, however nowadays much of it is malware-oriented %26amp; phishing-oriented by the criminal element, as in ID theft, building bot networks, etc.



As for the anti-spam software companies being behind it--doubtful. I have never spent a dime on their products. I use the free ones, there's tons of them available

.Is spam meant to be read or really just meant to generate sales of anti-spam products?
Anti-spam companies are not behind spam



Spamming is very lucrative: as many as 1 out of ever 50 spams can generate a purchase, and so as long as so many idiots continue to give their money to spammers spam will continue to thrive.



All on spam: http://spamtrackers.eu/wiki

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Is spam meant to be read or really just meant to generate sales of anti-spam products?
the only good Spam is the one in the can :)

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